Northern Exposure: Spain Pumps

A LOW pressure larger than North America sat and span surf towards Europe on December 16th, 17th and 19th. It wasn't much cop for anywhere facing due west but a little bit of a northerly aspect and you were golden. Just one such place was Northern Spain.

Words and pictures Chris McClean

It was a last minute decision to hit the Basque country. The charts looked like Europe's entire Atlantic coastline was going to get pumping surf, decisions, decisions. We were planning on Ireland but then a couple of curveballs were thrown in and that was off. So I dropped Mundaka regular, Kepa Acero a line, 36hrs later and I'm sipping coffee with him and traveling Chilean surfer Luis Claro and making a plan for that afternoon.

Mundaka is a special place, the walls of the local bars are lined with signed boards and pictures of the the top 44 with the local surfers and staff (the World Tour was last held here in 2009 and no return is planned).

Surfing is ingrained into the culture of this place and it's not hard to see why - a machine perfect barrel unloads on the sandbar and reels for what seems like forever. Claims are quite rightly justifiable here, three barrels sections link up and I'm not one to throw cliques down but legitimately on its day you could catch the ride of your life.

Kepa Acero doesn't do things by halves, a 45 minute trek through swamp, forest and down sheer cliff to find empty waves thanks to Mundaka being off limits during the comp.

"God.... It was so hard to be there watching an all time day in Mundaka." Said Kepa "Epic waves and watching the competitors getting barrelled, it was perfect. I couldn't hold myself anymore it was so frustrating. One of the most dramatic surfing days of my life."

"We need the south winds here in the coast, and it only happened that day. The rest of the time was west winds, which is not bad at all, but you know, after watching epic Mundaka i's like having a beautiful nude woman in front of you for a day and you can't touch her."

The southerly Jet Stream meant the swell developed further south than has been typical of recent storms, bringing large swell to the coasts of Portugal and Central Europe and opening up less exposed areas of Ireland, Wales and England normally sheltered from more northerly systems.

For Northern Spain the swell came in from a more westerly direction than is typically seen, stretching out the points and bringing classic contions for those in the know.